Olympic metals by country
@ The American Website ranking it on medals won instead of Golds like every other site.
Not to bring up a few-days-old line, but why is it strange to be counting the total number of medals? I don't even really give a damn who's winning what count, but considering the tally is supposed to be medal
s, not meda
l, why would silvers and bronzes be omitted? It's like you're saying, "Yes, yes, those silvers and bronzes are lovely and all, but y'see, they're just not
shiny enough. Better luck next time." Being second-best in the world is a pretty damn good accomplishment in its own right. Or, at the very least, one could implement some sort of 3-for-gold, 2-for-silver, and 1-for-bronze scoring system; it's still scaled, but at least then you're not ignoring the accomplishments of 2/3 of the medaling athletes.
(And for anyone wondering if this is a temporary aberration, the media's been listing medal counts in this manner over here for as long as I've been watching the Olympics. And I've been watching the Olympics for a good 16 years or so.)
What I honestly find most interesting about the whole thing is the overall consistency of the medals. When you look at us or Russia or Britain or Australia, there's a pretty even spread across all three medals. But when it comes to China, it's an all-or-nothing distribution. Yes, winning 47 (at the moment) golds is very impressive, but it's tempered a bit by the fact that the rest of your athletes don't get on the other podium steps all that often.
All of that aside, Phelps was amazing, beach volleyball is awesome, and I'm still convinced that someone just made up handball on a street corner last week.